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Wheat blast: The last enemy of hunger fighters

Abstract

Effective strategies for disease control are crucial for sustaining world food production and ensuring food security for the population. Wheat blast, a disease caused by the pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Triticum, has been a concern for cereal producers and researchers due to its aggressiveness and rapid expansion. To solve this problem, the development of resistant varieties with durable resistance is an effective, economical and sustainable way to control the disease. Conventional breeding can be aided by several molecular tools to facilitate the mining of many sources of resistance, such as R genes and QTLs. The identification of new sources of resistance, whether in the wheat crop or in other cereals are an opportunity for efficient wheat breeding through the application of different techniques. Since this disease is still poorly studied in wheat, knowledge of the rice Magnaporthe pathotype may be adapted to control wheat blast. Thus, genetic mapping, molecular markers, transgenic approaches, and genomic editing are valuable technologies to fight wheat blast. This review aimed to compile the biotechnological alternatives available to accelerate the development of improved cultivars for resistance to wheat blast.

Keywords:
Biotic stress; biotechnology tools; Magnaporthe oryzae L; Triticum aestivum L

Introduction

Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has a prominent role in the global economy, being associated with food security. In Brazil, wheat is the main winter crop, reaching 7.7 million ton in 2.73 million ha, resulting in an average yield of 2,803 kg ha-1 (CONAB, 2021CONAB (2021) Boletim da safra de grãos, Companhia Nacional de Abastecimento, Brasília, CONAB (2021) Boletim da safra de grãos, Companhia Nacional de Abastecimento, Brasília, https://www.conab.gov.br/info-agro/safras/graos/boletim-da-safra-de-graos (accessed 18 October 2022)
https://www.conab.gov.br/info-agro/safra...
; USDA, 2021USDA (2021) United States Departament of Agriculture, Publications wheat, USDA (2021) United States Departament of Agriculture, Publications wheat, http://www.ers.usda.gov (accessed 18 October 2022).
http://www.ers.usda.gov ...
). Although Brazil ranks 15th among the world’s largest wheat producers, the volume of wheat grown in the country is not capable of meeting internal consumption needs (USDA, 2021USDA (2021) United States Departament of Agriculture, Publications wheat, USDA (2021) United States Departament of Agriculture, Publications wheat, http://www.ers.usda.gov (accessed 18 October 2022).
http://www.ers.usda.gov ...
). Despite the great potential, the national cereal production scenario is affected by climatic factors, pests and diseases, causing restrictions to productivity (Souza and Vieira Filho, 2021Souza RGD and Vieira Filho JER (2021) Produção de trigo no Brasil: Análise de políticas econômicas e seus impactos. RPA 30:45-61.). Diseases and pests are one of the main limitations to wheat production, causing reductions of 21% per year (Savary et al., 2019Savary S, Willocquet L, Pethybridge SJ, Esker P, McRoberts N and Nelson A (2019) The global burden of pathogens and pests on major food crops. Nat Ecol Evol 3:430-439.). Wheat blast, caused by Pyricularia oryzae, syn. Magnaporthe oryzae, pathotype Triticum (MoT), ranks first among the top 10 fungal pathogens in wheat based on its scientific/economic importance (Dean et al., 2012Dean R, Van Kan JA, Pretorius ZA, Hammond‐Kosack KE, Di Pietro A, Spanu PD, Rudd JJ, Dickman M, Kahmann R, Ellis J et al. (2012) The Top 10 fungal pathogens in molecular plant pathology. Mol Plant Pathol 13:414-430.). Wheat blast appeared in Brazil in 1985, in the state of Paraná, and spread to other Brazilian states and later to several wheat-growing regions in Latin America (Urashima et al., 1993Urashima AS, Igarashi S and Kato H (1993) Host range, mating type, and fertility of Pyricularia grisea from wheat in Brazil. Plant Dis 77:1211-1216.; Goulart et al., 2007Goulart ACP, Sousa PG and Urashima AS (2007) Danos em trigo causados pela infecção de Pyricularia grisea. Summa Phytopathol 33:358-363.). In 2016, MoT was reported in Bangladesh and, since then, it has been causing risks for wheat production on the Asian continent (Callaway, 2016Callaway E (2016) Devastating wheat fungus appears in Asia for first time. Nature 532:421-422.; Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.). By 2017, the disease had spread to India, one of the world’s largest wheat producers (Bhattacharya and Mondal, 2017Bhattacharya R and Mondal H (2017) Fungus sees wheat crops in Bengal go up in flames as govt controls its spread, Hindustan Time, India, Bhattacharya R and Mondal H (2017) Fungus sees wheat crops in Bengal go up in flames as govt controls its spread, Hindustan Time, India, https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/fungus-sees-wheat-crops-in-bengal-go-up-in-flames-as-govt-controls-its-spread/story ok3NRwnvzR3InZwFnmZcHL.html (accessed 25 August 2021).
https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-new...
; Yesmin et al., 2020Yesmin N, Jenny F, Abdullah HM, Hossain MM, Kader MA, Solomon PS and Bhuiyan MA (2020) A review on South Asian wheat blast: The present status and future perspective. Plant Pathol 69:1618-1629.). In 2017-2018, MoT was identified in Zambia, on the African continent (Tembo et al., 2020Tembo B, Mulenga RM, Sichilima S, M’siska KK, Mwale M, Chikoti PC, Singh PK, He X, Pedley KF, Peterson GL et al. (2020) Detection and characterization of fungus (Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Triticum) causing wheat blast disease on rain-fed grown wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in Zambia. PLoS One 15:e0238724.).

To control blast, genetic resistance is considered the most efficient and sustainable way. However, genetic resistance is a challenge for breeders and plant pathologists, due to the high diversity of MoT and the complexity of resistance inheritance. In this scenario, it is essential that cereal breeders use genomic science tools to develop strategies to control the disease in an effective and lasting way.

For the identification of genes as sources of resistance, as well as closely linked molecular markers, the mapping of Quantitative Trait Loci (QTLs) presents itself as a powerful tool. Likewise, transcriptomic analysis as RNASeq, Microarrays and quantitative real-time PCR help to identify routes and genes associated with genetic resistance (Kumar et al., 2020Kumar S, Kashyap PL, Mahapatra S, Jasrotia P and Singh GP (2020) New and emerging technologies for detecting Magnaporthe oryzae causing blast disease in crop plants. J Crop Prot 143:105473.). The marker assisted selection (MAS) is one of the most used tools of genomic science and its application is a strategy for improving germplasm and the development of new blast resistant cultivars (He et al., 2020He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Xu K, Marza F, Odilbekov F, Chawade A, Duveiller E, Huttner E et al. (2020) QTL mapping for field resistance to wheat blast in the Caninde# 1/Alondra population. Theor Appl Genet 133:2673-2683.). In recent years, gene editing has gained notoriety due to its ability to enable the development of new genotypes through the modification of genes and/or DNA segments, resulting in the modification of interest, such as the plant resistance response to MoT infection (Zhu et al., 2017Zhu C, Bortesi L, Baysal C, Twyman RM, Fischer R, Capell T, Schillberg S and Christou P (2017) Characteristics of genome editing mutations in cereal crops. Trends Plant Sci 22:38-52.).

Finally, transgenics have already proven effective in improving other traits and can be considered as an option also in the search for durable resistance (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.). Therefore, this work aims to compile the available alternatives of genomic science to accelerate the development of MoT resistant wheat cultivars.

Wheat blast

Wheat blast originated in Brazil and initially spread to Bolivia, Paraguay and Argentina (Urashima et al., 1993Urashima AS, Igarashi S and Kato H (1993) Host range, mating type, and fertility of Pyricularia grisea from wheat in Brazil. Plant Dis 77:1211-1216.; Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Ceresini et al., 2018Ceresini PC, Castroagudín VL, Rodrigues FÁ, Rios JA, Eduardo Aucique-Pérez C, Moreira SI, Alves E, Croll D and Maciel JLN (2018) Wheat blast: Past, present, and future. Annu Rev Phytopathol 56:427-456.; Singh et al., 2021Singh PK, Gahtyari NC, Roy C, Roy KK, He X, Tembo B, Xu K, Juliana P, Sonder K, Kabir MR et al. (2021) Wheat blast: A disease spreading by intercontinental jumps and its management strategies. Front Plant Sci 12:1467.). Currently, pathogen strains from South America are identified as causing the disease in countries on other continents (Singh et al., 2021Singh PK, Gahtyari NC, Roy C, Roy KK, He X, Tembo B, Xu K, Juliana P, Sonder K, Kabir MR et al. (2021) Wheat blast: A disease spreading by intercontinental jumps and its management strategies. Front Plant Sci 12:1467.) (Figure 1).

Figure 1 -
Blast occurrence in different countries. A. Countries in the South American affected by blast and the year of the disease arrival; B. Countries in Asia affected by blast and the year of the disease arrival; C. Country on the African continent affected by blast and the year of the disease arrival.

Originally the blast disease was identified in rice (Oryza sativa L.), caused by Pyricularia oryzae, syn. Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Oryzae (MoO). Magnaporthe oryzae has an extensive host range and is responsible for causing blast disease in 50 species belonging to the Poaceae family, including the main cereal crops, such as wheat and barley (Gladieux et al., 2018Gladieux P, Condon B, Ravel S, Soanes D, Maciel JLN, Nhani Jr A, Chen L, Terauchi R, Lebrun MH, Tharreau D et al. (2018) Gene flow between divergent cereal-and grass-specific lineages of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. MBio 9:e01219-17.; Langner et al., 2018Langner T, Bialas A and Kamoun S (2018) The blast fungus decoded: Genomes in flux. mBio 9:e00571-18.; Valent et al., 2019Valent B, Farman M, Tosa Y, Begerow D, Fournier E, Gladieux P, Islam MT, Kamoun S, Kemler M, Kohn LM et al. (2019) Pyricularia graminis‐tritici is not the correct species name for the wheat blast fungus: Response to Ceresini et al. (MPP 20: 2). Mol Plant Pathol 20:173-179.). Previous reports have shown that a single species of the pathogen is associated with the disease and is divided into strains/pathotype that are adapted to different hosts (Gladieux et al., 2018Gladieux P, Condon B, Ravel S, Soanes D, Maciel JLN, Nhani Jr A, Chen L, Terauchi R, Lebrun MH, Tharreau D et al. (2018) Gene flow between divergent cereal-and grass-specific lineages of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. MBio 9:e01219-17.; Valent et al., 2019Valent B, Farman M, Tosa Y, Begerow D, Fournier E, Gladieux P, Islam MT, Kamoun S, Kemler M, Kohn LM et al. (2019) Pyricularia graminis‐tritici is not the correct species name for the wheat blast fungus: Response to Ceresini et al. (MPP 20: 2). Mol Plant Pathol 20:173-179.). In other words, individual pathogen isolates tend to be associated with a single Poaceae genus, showing specific genetic divergence among different host genotypes (Bentham et al., 2021Bentham AR, Petit-Houdenot Y, Win J, Chuma I, Terauchi R, Banfield MJ, Kamoun S and Langner T (2021) A single amino acid polymorphism in a conserved effector of the multihost blast fungus pathogen expands host-target binding spectrum. PLoS Pathog 17:e1009957.). In wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), blast is caused by a strain of M. oryzae Triticum (MoT) that is adapted to cause disease in hosts of the Triticum genus, and this strain is not able to cause infection in rice crops (Maciel et al., 2014Maciel JLN, Ceresini PC, Castroagudin VL, Zala M, Kema GH and McDonald BA (2014) Population structure and pathotype diversity of the wheat blast pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae 25 years after its emergence in Brazil. Phytopathology 104:95-107.; Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.). However, due to the wide range of hosts (multihosts), crossings between isolates from different strains can result in gene flow between them (Yesmin et al., 2020Yesmin N, Jenny F, Abdullah HM, Hossain MM, Kader MA, Solomon PS and Bhuiyan MA (2020) A review on South Asian wheat blast: The present status and future perspective. Plant Pathol 69:1618-1629.).

Recently, Paul et al. (2022Paul SK, Mahmud NU, Gupta DR, Rani K, Kang H, Wang GL, Jankuloski L and Islam T (2022) Oryzae pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae can cause typical blast disease symptoms on both leaves and spikes of wheat under a growth room condition. Phytopathology Research 4:9.) demonstrated that the MoO pathotype, in a controlled environment, was able to infect wheat leaves and ears, whereas MoT was unable to infect rice plants. In this way, the study revealed the vulnerability of wheat, not only to MoT, but also to the MoO pathotype. As well as providing evidence of a potential MoO wheat blast epidemic in many rice and wheat growing regions with worsening climate changes. Thus, understanding of rice Magnaporthe pathotype may be adapted to control wheat blast.

The reproduction strategy of MoT is another feature that constrains blast control. Studies have reported occurrences of sexual reproduction of MoT in the field, which suggests that in wheat, unlike rice, the pathogen follows a mixed reproduction system (Maciel et al., 2014Maciel JLN, Ceresini PC, Castroagudin VL, Zala M, Kema GH and McDonald BA (2014) Population structure and pathotype diversity of the wheat blast pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae 25 years after its emergence in Brazil. Phytopathology 104:95-107.; Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Yesmin et al., 2020Yesmin N, Jenny F, Abdullah HM, Hossain MM, Kader MA, Solomon PS and Bhuiyan MA (2020) A review on South Asian wheat blast: The present status and future perspective. Plant Pathol 69:1618-1629.).

Pathogens that have a mixed reproductive system, in which sexual recombination is followed by asexual recombination, are considered to have high evolutionary potential and, consequently, more difficult to control due to the dispersion of better adapted clones (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Yesmin et al., 2020Yesmin N, Jenny F, Abdullah HM, Hossain MM, Kader MA, Solomon PS and Bhuiyan MA (2020) A review on South Asian wheat blast: The present status and future perspective. Plant Pathol 69:1618-1629.).

Wheat blast is considered one of the main diseases that affect the wheat crop. MoT can cause reductions in grain yield and quality, leading to production losses of up to 100% (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Singh et al., 2021Singh PK, Gahtyari NC, Roy C, Roy KK, He X, Tembo B, Xu K, Juliana P, Sonder K, Kabir MR et al. (2021) Wheat blast: A disease spreading by intercontinental jumps and its management strategies. Front Plant Sci 12:1467.). The disease can occur in all parts of the plant, but in the ear its high incidence has the greatest impact (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). The blast symptom found in ears is the total or partial bleaching of the ear above the point of infection (Figure 2), which occurs due to the colonization of the fungus in the tissue, preventing nutrient transport and impairing grain filling (Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.; Singh et al., 2021Singh PK, Gahtyari NC, Roy C, Roy KK, He X, Tembo B, Xu K, Juliana P, Sonder K, Kabir MR et al. (2021) Wheat blast: A disease spreading by intercontinental jumps and its management strategies. Front Plant Sci 12:1467.).

Figure 2 -
Blast symptom in wheat ears. A. Evolution of blast symptoms in wheat ears; B. Effect on wheat grain formation due infection by Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Triticum in rachis.

Taking into account all the characteristics of the disease mentioned above, genetic resistance is considered the best alternative for blast control. In the search for controlling strategies, plant genetic improvement plays an extremely important role due to the identification of genetic resistance sources and its use in the development of cultivars that are effectively resistant to the pathogen (Valent et al., 2019Valent B, Farman M, Tosa Y, Begerow D, Fournier E, Gladieux P, Islam MT, Kamoun S, Kemler M, Kohn LM et al. (2019) Pyricularia graminis‐tritici is not the correct species name for the wheat blast fungus: Response to Ceresini et al. (MPP 20: 2). Mol Plant Pathol 20:173-179.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). Plant defense reactions to attack by pathogens can be characterized by the number of genes that govern them, and may be specific against pathogen races (vertical) and non-specific (horizontal) (Savadi et al., 2018Savadi S, Prasad P, Kashyap PL and Bhardwaj SC (2018) Molecular breeding technologies and strategies for rust resistance in wheat (Triticum aestivum) for sustained food security. Plant Pathol 67:771-791.). In wheat, mainly the horizontal resistance has been detected, indicating moderate resistance responses with variation among different pathogen isolates and in different environments. This resistance response is governed by several minor effect genes (QTLs), acting together and is generally more difficult to overcome (Maciel et al., 2014Maciel JLN, Ceresini PC, Castroagudin VL, Zala M, Kema GH and McDonald BA (2014) Population structure and pathotype diversity of the wheat blast pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae 25 years after its emergence in Brazil. Phytopathology 104:95-107.). In this sense, the search for genes / QTLs of resistance (R) to MoT has been intense over the last decades.

Sources of resistance

Genes involved with wheat blast resistance

To date, a total of 10 R genes have been identified for wheat blast (Table 1) (RmgTd(t), Rmg1(Rwt4), Rmg2, Rmg3, Rmg4, Rmg5, Rmg6(Rwt3), Rmg7, Rmg8 and RmgGR119) (Takabayashi et al., 2002Takabayashi N, Tosa Y, Oh HS and Mayama S (2002) A gene-for-gene relationship underlying the species-specific parasitism of Avena/Triticum isolates of Magnaporthe grisea on wheat cultivars. Phytopathology 92:1182-1188.; Zhan et al., 2008Zhan SW, Mayama S and Tosa Y (2008) Identification of two genes for resistance to Triticum isolates of Magnaporthe oryzae in wheat. Genome 51:216-221.; Nga et al., 2009Nga NTT, Hau VTB and Tosa Y (2009) Identification of genes for resistance to a Digitaria isolate of Magnaporthe grisea in common wheat cultivars. Genome 52:801-809.; Vy et al., 2014Vy TTP, Hyon GS, Nga NTT, Inoue Y, Chuma I and Tosa Y (2014) Genetic analysis of host-pathogen incompatibility between Lolium isolates of Pyricularia oryzae and wheat. J Gen Plant Pathol 80:59-65.; Anh et al., 2015Anh VL, Anh NT, Tagle AG, Vy TTP, Inoue Y, Takumi S, Chuma I and Tosa Y (2015) Rmg8, a new gene for resistance to Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae in hexaploid wheat. Phytopathology 105:1568-1572.; Tagle et al., 2015Tagle AG, Chuma I and Tosa Y (2015) Rmg7, a new gene for resistance to Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae identified in tetraploid wheat. Phytopathology 105:495-499.; Anhet al., 2018; Wang S et al., 2018Wang S, Asuke S, Vy TTP, Inoue Y, Chuma I, Win J, Kato K and Tosa Y (2018) A new resistance gene in combination with Rmg8 confers strong resistance against Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae in a common wheat landrace. Phytopathology 108:1299-1306.). However, these genes are specific against pathogen races and their expressions depend on the stage of the plant development and temperature, that should be high (~25 °C) to be ideal for infection and disease development (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). The Rmg2 and Rmg3 genes are not effective in the head stage and at elevated temperatures. Rmg7 and Rmg8 provide resistance in the seedling and head stages and both are active at low temperatures (21-24 °C). However, at elevated temperatures (26 °C), Rmg7 loses its role in resistance, while Rmg8 remains effective (Tagle et al., 2015Tagle AG, Chuma I and Tosa Y (2015) Rmg7, a new gene for resistance to Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae identified in tetraploid wheat. Phytopathology 105:495-499.; Anh et al., 2018Anh VL, Inoue Y, Asuke S, Vy TTP, Anh NT, Wang S, Chuma I and Tosa Y (2018) Rmg8 and Rmg7, wheat genes for resistance to the wheat blast fungus, recognize the same avirulence gene AVR‐Rmg8. Mol Plant Pathol 19:1252-1256.). RmgGR119, as well as Rmg7 and Rmg8, confers resistance against the ear infection by MoT, and there are still no cases of overcoming this resistance (He et al., 2020He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Xu K, Marza F, Odilbekov F, Chawade A, Duveiller E, Huttner E et al. (2020) QTL mapping for field resistance to wheat blast in the Caninde# 1/Alondra population. Theor Appl Genet 133:2673-2683.). Therefore, the most promising genes for use in breeding programs for MoT resistance are Rmg8 and RmgGR119, although RmgGR119 has been shown to act additively with Rmg8 for resistance against the Brazilian isolate BR48 of MoT (Wang S et al., 2018Wang M, Wang S, Liang Z, Shi W, Gao C and Xia G (2018) From genetic stock to genome editing: Gene exploitation in wheat. Trends Biotechnol 36:160-172.; Inoue et al., 2021Inoue Y, Vy TTP, Tani D and Tosa Y (2021) Suppression of wheat blast resistance by an effector of Pyricularia oryzae is counteracted by a host specificity resistance gene in wheat. New Phytol 229:488-500.). The combination of these genes has the potential to confer a more durable and efficient resistance (Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.).

Table 1 -
Sources of resistance to wheat blast.

In addition to these genes, a 2NS chromosomal segment translocation was identified in Aegilops ventricosa as a source of resistance to wheat blast (Cruz et al., 2016Cruz CD, Peterson GL, Bockus WW, Kankanala P, Dubcovsky J, Jordan KW, Akhunov E, Chumley F, Baldelomar FD and Valent B (2016) The 2NS translocation from Aegilops ventricosa confers resistance to the Triticum pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae. Crop Sci 56:990-1000.) (Table 1). Its presence has been identified in genotypes with a higher level of resistance to MoT, and its efficacy has been confirmed in natural epidemic conditions (Cruz et al., 2016Cruz CD, Peterson GL, Bockus WW, Kankanala P, Dubcovsky J, Jordan KW, Akhunov E, Chumley F, Baldelomar FD and Valent B (2016) The 2NS translocation from Aegilops ventricosa confers resistance to the Triticum pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae. Crop Sci 56:990-1000.; Cruppe et al., 2021Cruppe G, Silva P, Lemes da Silva C, Peterson G, Pedley KF, Cruz CD, Asif M, Lollato RP, Fritz AK and Valent B (2021) Genome‐wide association reveals limited benefits of pyramiding the 1B and 1D loci with the 2NvS translocation for wheat blast control. Crop Sci 61:1089-1103.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). However, this resistance is not effective for some MoT isolates (Inoue et al., 2021Inoue Y, Vy TTP, Tani D and Tosa Y (2021) Suppression of wheat blast resistance by an effector of Pyricularia oryzae is counteracted by a host specificity resistance gene in wheat. New Phytol 229:488-500.).

Concerning the resistance sources to be used in genetic improvement, an important aspect is their durability. The durability of the resistance conferred by the R genes is evaluated based on their corresponding AVR genes, the effectors known as avirulence molecules (AVRs) that are present in the pathogen (Hafeez et al., 2021Hafeez AN, Arora S, Ghosh S, Gilbert D, Bowden RL and Wulff BB (2021) Creation and judicious application of a wheat resistance gene atlas. Mol Plant 14:1053-1070.; Inoue et al., 2021Inoue Y, Vy TTP, Tani D and Tosa Y (2021) Suppression of wheat blast resistance by an effector of Pyricularia oryzae is counteracted by a host specificity resistance gene in wheat. New Phytol 229:488-500.). The R genes encode immune receptors that directly or indirectly recognize AVRs, and trigger the initiation of defense responses capable of limiting the pathogen proliferation in the host (Hafeez et al., 2021Hafeez AN, Arora S, Ghosh S, Gilbert D, Bowden RL and Wulff BB (2021) Creation and judicious application of a wheat resistance gene atlas. Mol Plant 14:1053-1070.). An example is the AVR-Rmg8 gene, which was conserved in MoT isolates, that is recognized by the protein encoded by the Rmg8 gene (Wang S et al., 2018Wang S, Asuke S, Vy TTP, Inoue Y, Chuma I, Win J, Kato K and Tosa Y (2018) A new resistance gene in combination with Rmg8 confers strong resistance against Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae in a common wheat landrace. Phytopathology 108:1299-1306.). A recent study suggested that the effect of Rmg8 is suppressed by the effect of the PWT4 gene, the corresponding AVR gene of Rmg1(Rwt4), which was transferred horizontally from P. pennisetigena isolates to P. oryzae isolates from oat (Inoue et al., 2021Inoue Y, Vy TTP, Tani D and Tosa Y (2021) Suppression of wheat blast resistance by an effector of Pyricularia oryzae is counteracted by a host specificity resistance gene in wheat. New Phytol 229:488-500.). The transfer of the PWT4 to MoT isolates would imply a potential risk of overcoming the resistance conferred by Rmg8. This is because, PWT4 suppresses Rmg8-mediated resistance in wheat or interferes with recognition of AVR-Rmg8 by Rmg8. Thus, to avoid an irreparable loss of wheat resistance to MoT, it is recommended that Rmg8 be introduced together with Rmg1(Rwt4) (Inoue et al., 2021Inoue Y, Vy TTP, Tani D and Tosa Y (2021) Suppression of wheat blast resistance by an effector of Pyricularia oryzae is counteracted by a host specificity resistance gene in wheat. New Phytol 229:488-500.).

The identification of other sources of resistance to MoT is of high importance due to the risk that the disease will spread to other wheat-producing regions, threatening world food security (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). Therefore, it is necessary to use technologies such as QTL mapping and gene expression analysis. A larger number of genomic sequences and genes involved in resistance can help the plant genetic improvement process, enabling a variety of combinations in order to slow down the pathogen’s co-evolution and to improve the durability of resistance to wheat blast.

Gene pool

The phenomenon of polyploidization that generated bread wheat led to a restricted genetic diversity (polyploidization bottleneck), making wheat breeding a challenging task, when compared to other crops (Ali et al., 2008Ali Y, Atta BM, Akhter J, Monneveux P and Lateef Z (2008) Genetic variability, association and diversity studies in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) germplasm. Pak J Bot 40:2087-2097.; Venske et al., 2019Venske E, Dos Santos RS, Busanello C, Gustafson P and de Oliveira AC (2019) Bread wheat: A role model for plant domestication and breeding. Hereditas 156:16.). In addition to this, domestication, centuries of cultivation and the selection pressure exerted within crop breeding programs has favored a reduction in genetic diversity (Savadi et al., 2018Savadi S, Prasad P, Kashyap PL and Bhardwaj SC (2018) Molecular breeding technologies and strategies for rust resistance in wheat (Triticum aestivum) for sustained food security. Plant Pathol 67:771-791.; Venske et al., 2019Venske E, Dos Santos RS, Busanello C, Gustafson P and de Oliveira AC (2019) Bread wheat: A role model for plant domestication and breeding. Hereditas 156:16.). Wheat breeding programs around the world rely on limited germplasm, resulting in wheat cultivars that comprise only 10% of existing wheat diversity (Savadi et al., 2018Savadi S, Prasad P, Kashyap PL and Bhardwaj SC (2018) Molecular breeding technologies and strategies for rust resistance in wheat (Triticum aestivum) for sustained food security. Plant Pathol 67:771-791.).

Under these conditions, an important alternative to increase genetic diversity is the use of species from the secondary and tertiary gene pools as donors of new genes and alleles (Ceresini et al., 2018Ceresini PC, Castroagudín VL, Rodrigues FÁ, Rios JA, Eduardo Aucique-Pérez C, Moreira SI, Alves E, Croll D and Maciel JLN (2018) Wheat blast: Past, present, and future. Annu Rev Phytopathol 56:427-456.; Venske et al., 2019Venske E, Dos Santos RS, Busanello C, Gustafson P and de Oliveira AC (2019) Bread wheat: A role model for plant domestication and breeding. Hereditas 156:16.; Tosa, 2021Tosa Y (2021) Toward development of resistant lines against a transboundary plant disease: Wheat blast. J Gen Plant Pathol 87:394-397.). These are important sources of resistance genes to different biotic and abiotic stresses. However, the use of these sources of diversity is complicated due to problems related to crossover incompatibility, hybrid sterility, in addition to the linkage of several undesirable characters with desirable ones (linkage drag).

Despite having these disadvantages when one considers conventional (classic manual crossing), to explore the gene pools as resistance gene donors through genetic transformation and genome editing can be used (Venske et al., 2019Venske E, Dos Santos RS, Busanello C, Gustafson P and de Oliveira AC (2019) Bread wheat: A role model for plant domestication and breeding. Hereditas 156:16.; Sharma et al., 2021Sharma SK, Sharma D, Meena RP, Yadav MK, Hosahatti R, Dubey AK, Sharma P, Kumar S, Pramesh D, Nabi SU et al. (2021) Recent insights in rice blast disease resistance. In: Nayaka SC, Hosahatti R, Prakash G, Satyavathi CT and Sharma R (eds) Blast disease of cereal crops, Fungal Biology, Springer, Cham, pp 89-123.). Furthermore, another alternative to increase genetic diversity is mutation inducing, which enables the creation of new alleles.

Most of the resistance genes (and chromosomal segment) against wheat blast fungus come from related species, such as Triticum dicoccoides and Aegilops ventricosa (Table 1). To find new genes, Triticum-Aegilops accessions have been explored, such as T. boeoticum, Ae. tauschii, Ae. umbellulata, Ae. comosa, and Ae. uniaristata, even if still without promising results (Tosa, 2021Tosa Y (2021) Toward development of resistant lines against a transboundary plant disease: Wheat blast. J Gen Plant Pathol 87:394-397.).

In rice, a greater number of genes for resistance to blast have been documented, there are also examples of R genes originating from documented Oryza species. The genes Pirf2-1(t) from O. rufipogon, Pi-40(t) from O. australiensis, Pi-13 from O. minuta, Pid3-A4 from O. rufipogon, Pi54rh from O. rhizomatis and Pi54of from O. officinalis (Amante-Bordeos et al., 1992Amante-Bordeos A, Sitch LA, Nelson R, Dalmacio RD, Oliva NP, Aswidinnoor H and Leung H (1992) Transfer of bacterial blight and blast resistance from the tetraploid wild rice Oryza minuta to cultivated rice, Oryza sativa. Theor Appl Genet 84:345-354.; Jeung et al., 2007Jeung JU, Kim BR, Cho YC, Han SS, Moon HP, Lee YT and Jena KK (2007) A novel gene, Pi40(t), linked to the DNA markers derived from NBS-LRR motifs confers broad spectrum of blast resistance in rice. Theor Appl Genet 115:1163-1177.; Utani et al., 2008Utani DW, Moeljopawiro S, Aswidinnoor H, Setiawan A and Hanarida I (2008) Blast resistance genes in wild rice Oryza rufipogon and rice cultivar IR64. Indonesian J Agric 1:71-76.; Das et al., 2012Das A, Soubam D, Singh PK, Thakur S, Singh NK and Sharma TR (2012) A novel blast resistance gene, Pi54rh cloned from wild species of rice, Oryza rhizomatis confers broad spectrum resistance to Magnaporthe oryzae. Funct Integr Genomics 12:215-228.; Lv et al., 2013Lv Q, Xu X, Shang J, Jiang G, Pang Z, Zhou Z, Wang J, Liu Y, Li T, Li X et al. (2013) Functional analysis of Pid3-A4, an ortholog of rice blast resistance gene Pid3 revealed by allele mining in common wild rice. Phytopathology 103:594-599.; Devanna et al., 2014Devanna NB, Vijayan J and Sharma TR (2014) The blast resistance gene Pi54of cloned from Oryza officinalis interacts with Avr-Pi54 through its novel non-LRR domains. PLoS One 9:e104840.). However, to better explore these sources of diversity, it is necessary that screening for blast resistance should be performed under controlled conditions, using a representative selection of virulent pathogen isolates (Ceresini et al., 2018Ceresini PC, Castroagudín VL, Rodrigues FÁ, Rios JA, Eduardo Aucique-Pérez C, Moreira SI, Alves E, Croll D and Maciel JLN (2018) Wheat blast: Past, present, and future. Annu Rev Phytopathol 56:427-456.).

Another alternative would be to explore familiar crops such as oats, rice and barley. Using bioinformatics, it is possible to find differentially expressed genes for the blast stress in these crops that are corresponding to wheat (Cruz and Valent, 2017Cruz CD and Valent B (2017) Wheat blast disease: Danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol 42:210-222.; Tosa, 2021Tosa Y (2021) Toward development of resistant lines against a transboundary plant disease: Wheat blast. J Gen Plant Pathol 87:394-397.).

Molecular markers and QTL mapping

The development and application of molecular markers in plant genetic improvement have helped breeders during the development process of new cultivars, enabling the selection of plants with desirable traits in a precise way, minimizing the effects of the environment (Devanna et al., 2014Devanna NB, Vijayan J and Sharma TR (2014) The blast resistance gene Pi54of cloned from Oryza officinalis interacts with Avr-Pi54 through its novel non-LRR domains. PLoS One 9:e104840.). In the main cultivated species, it is possible to find examples of the application of molecular markers related to resistance to pathogens (Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). However, due to the wide variety of markers available, it is important to understand how this technology works to better apply it. From the creation of molecular markers, it was possible to apply them in QTL mapping, in marker assisted selection (MAS), and as an auxiliary tool in gene editing and genetic transformation, to produce superior plants. In addition, molecular markers can be used to assess genetic diversity, parental assessment, germplasm characterization, among other applications (Idrees and Irshad, 2014Idrees MU and Irshad MU (2014) Molecular markers in plants for analysis of genetic diversity: A review. Eur J Acad Res 2:1513-1540.; Kordrostami and Rahimi, 2015Kordrostami M and Rahimi M (2015) Molecular markers in plants: Concepts and applications. Genet 3rd Millenn 13:4024-4031.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.).

In rice breeding for blast resistance, SNP markers were developed for the R genes Piz, Piz-t, Pit, Pik, Pik-m, Pikp, Pita, Pita-2 and Pib (Hayashi et al., 2004Hayashi K, Hashimoto N, Daigen M and Ashikawa I (2004) Development of PCR-based SNP markers for rice blast resistance genes at the Piz locus. Theor Appl Genet 108:1212-1220.). In wheat, SNPs have been used in several Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) for blast resistance (Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.; Juliana et al. 2020Juliana P, He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Marza F, Poland J, Shrestha S, Singh RP and Singh PK (2020) Genome-wide association mapping for wheat blast resistance in CIMMYT’s international screening nurseries evaluated in Bolivia and Bangladesh. Sci Rep 10:15972.; Cruppe et al., 2021Cruppe G, Silva P, Lemes da Silva C, Peterson G, Pedley KF, Cruz CD, Asif M, Lollato RP, Fritz AK and Valent B (2021) Genome‐wide association reveals limited benefits of pyramiding the 1B and 1D loci with the 2NvS translocation for wheat blast control. Crop Sci 61:1089-1103.; He et al., 2021He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Marza F, Chawade A, Duveiller E, Pierre CS and Singh PK (2021b) Genetic dissection for head blast resistance in wheat using two mapping populations. Heredity (Edinb) 128:402-410.a).

The mapping of economically important genes, based on genetic maps, has been supporting breeding programs for a wide range of plant species (Ashkani et al., 2016Ashkani S, Rafii MY, Shabanimofrad M, Ghasemzadeh A, Ravanfar SA and Latif MA (2016) Molecular progress on the mapping and cloning of functional genes for blast disease in rice (Oryza sativa L.): Current status and future considerations. Crit Rev Biotechnol 36:353-367.). Such importance is due to the fact that genetic mapping is able to locate and identify genes of a quantitative nature, which contributed to the variation of complex traits, such as disease resistance (Stich and Melchinger, 2010Stich B and Melchinger AE (2010) An introduction to association mapping in plants. CAB Rev 5:39.). For blast, more than 350 QTLs were mapped in rice (Ashkani et al., 2016Ashkani S, Rafii MY, Shabanimofrad M, Ghasemzadeh A, Ravanfar SA and Latif MA (2016) Molecular progress on the mapping and cloning of functional genes for blast disease in rice (Oryza sativa L.): Current status and future considerations. Crit Rev Biotechnol 36:353-367.; Devanna et al., 2014Devanna NB, Vijayan J and Sharma TR (2014) The blast resistance gene Pi54of cloned from Oryza officinalis interacts with Avr-Pi54 through its novel non-LRR domains. PLoS One 9:e104840.). However, the number of studies on QTL mapping that confer resistance to wheat blast resistance is still low (Table 2), and few of those available have identified major and stable QTLs beyond the 2AS / 2NS translocation (Singh et al., 2021Singh PK, Gahtyari NC, Roy C, Roy KK, He X, Tembo B, Xu K, Juliana P, Sonder K, Kabir MR et al. (2021) Wheat blast: A disease spreading by intercontinental jumps and its management strategies. Front Plant Sci 12:1467.).

Table 2 -
QTL studies in mapping for wheat blast resistance.

As several R genes have already been shown to be less effective against recent MoT isolates, combining sources of resistance will be essential to prevent further outbreaks of the disease. An example is a QTL unrelated to the 2AS / 2NS translocation involving BR 18-Terena, one of the Brazilian wheat genotypes with the highest level of resistance to MoT available in Brazil. BR 18-Terena has a quantitative resistance to wheat blast, and nine QTLs associated with resistance at the seedling and heading stages were detected (Table 2) (Goddard et al., 2020Goddard R, Steed A, Chinoy C, Ferreira JR, Scheeren PL, Maciel JLN, Caierão E, Torres GAM, Consoli L, Santana FM et al. (2020) Dissecting the genetic basis of wheat blast resistance in the Brazilian wheat cultivar BR 18-Terena. BMC Plant Biol 20:398.). QTLs are essential sources of resistance to retard the evolution of virulent MoT isolates. Thus, it is fundamental to amplify efforts for the identification of QTLs, especially those unrelated to the 2AS / 2NS translocation.

Recent studies that have been carried out in the field have shown that resistance to MoT is quantitative and that 2NS translocation explains much of the disease’s variation in different environments. A GWAS study was performed to identify genomic regions associated with resistance to MoT in the field (Juliana et al., 2020Juliana P, He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Marza F, Poland J, Shrestha S, Singh RP and Singh PK (2020) Genome-wide association mapping for wheat blast resistance in CIMMYT’s international screening nurseries evaluated in Bolivia and Bangladesh. Sci Rep 10:15972.). In this study, 36 markers associated with blast resistance were identified on chromosomes 2AS, 3BL, 4AL and 7BL, with more than half of them marking the 2NS translocation and explaining up to 71.8% of the variation for the disease. As in the previous study, a report on the 2NS translocation explaining 22.4-50.1% of disease variation in diverse environments in their mapping population was described (He et al., 2020He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Xu K, Marza F, Odilbekov F, Chawade A, Duveiller E, Huttner E et al. (2020) QTL mapping for field resistance to wheat blast in the Caninde# 1/Alondra population. Theor Appl Genet 133:2673-2683.). A QTL on chromosome 2AS explaining an average of 84.0% of the phenotypic variation in response to MoT was reported, reinforcing the potency of the 2NS translocation (Ferreira et al., 2021Ferreira JR, Torres GAM, Consoli L, Camilotti GA, Scagliusi SMM, Nhani Jr A, Turchetto C, Deuner CC, Goddard R and Nicholson P (2021) Quantitative trait loci conferring blast resistance in hexaploid wheat at adult plant stage. Plant Pathol 70:100-109.). He et al. (2021a)He X, Juliana P, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Islam R, Marza F, Peterson G, Singh GP, Chawade A, Joshi AK et al. (2021a) Screening and mapping for head blast resistance in a panel of CIMMYT and South Asian bread wheat germplasm. Front Genet 12:782. found that the 2NS translocation was the only major and consistent resistance locus, while loci in other chromosomal regions had low phenotypic effects and were not stably expressed in the experiments. In these studies, to verify the presence of the 2NS / 2AS translocation, the recommended markers are Ventriup-LN2 reported by Helguera et al. (2003)Helguera M, Khan IA, Kolmer J, Lijavetzky D, Zhong‐Qi L and Dubcovsky J (2003) PCR assays for the Lr37‐Yr17‐Sr38 cluster of rust resistance genes and their use to develop isogenic hard red spring wheat lines. Crop Sci 43:1839-1847., WGGB156 and WGGB159 by Wang et al. (2018)Wang S, Asuke S, Vy TTP, Inoue Y, Chuma I, Win J, Kato K and Tosa Y (2018) A new resistance gene in combination with Rmg8 confers strong resistance against Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae in a common wheat landrace. Phytopathology 108:1299-1306. and cslVrgal3, derived from a study by Seah et al. (2001)Seah S, Bariana H, Jahier J, Sivasithamparam K and Lagudah ES (2001) The introgressed segment carrying rust resistance genes Yr17, Lr37 and Sr38 in wheat can be assayed by a cloned disease resistance gene-like sequence. Theor Appl Genet 102:600-605.. However, there are still few markers related to major and stable QTLs beyond the 2AS / 2NS translocation (He et al., 2020He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Xu K, Marza F, Odilbekov F, Chawade A, Duveiller E, Huttner E et al. (2020) QTL mapping for field resistance to wheat blast in the Caninde# 1/Alondra population. Theor Appl Genet 133:2673-2683.; Juliana et al., 2020Juliana P, He X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Anwar MB, Marza F, Poland J, Shrestha S, Singh RP and Singh PK (2020) Genome-wide association mapping for wheat blast resistance in CIMMYT’s international screening nurseries evaluated in Bolivia and Bangladesh. Sci Rep 10:15972.; Heet al., 2021bHe X, Kabir MR, Roy KK, Marza F, Chawade A, Duveiller E, Pierre CS and Singh PK (2021b) Genetic dissection for head blast resistance in wheat using two mapping populations. Heredity (Edinb) 128:402-410.; Singh et al., 2021Singh PK, Gahtyari NC, Roy C, Roy KK, He X, Tembo B, Xu K, Juliana P, Sonder K, Kabir MR et al. (2021) Wheat blast: A disease spreading by intercontinental jumps and its management strategies. Front Plant Sci 12:1467.).

Breeding for blast resistance

Conventional breeding and mutation breeding

The genetic improvement of plants is one of the tools used to change plant traits in order to improve their qualities for human benefit, such as increasing cultivar yields and maintaining food security (Stich and Melchinger, 2010Stich B and Melchinger AE (2010) An introduction to association mapping in plants. CAB Rev 5:39.). Pathogens such as MoT pose a current and growing threat to food security and, to mitigate the problem, breeding strategies aimed at creating disease resistant cultivars are essential. In conventional breeding, the presence of genetic variability in the parents to be recombined influences directly the success of the program.

Therefore, sources of resistance genes, such as elite cultivars, germplasm collections, wild species and mutation induction must be explored.

For wheat blast, the genetic basis of resistance is not well defined due to the wide variation in the virulence scale (Urashima et al., 2004Urashima AS, Martins TD, Bueno CRNC, Favaro DB, Arruda MA and Mehta YR (2004) Triticale and barley: New hosts of Magnaporthe grisea in São Paulo, Brazil-relationship with blast of rice and wheat. In: Kawasaki S (ed) Rice blast: Interaction with rice and control, Springer, Dordrecht, pp 251-260.). However, we can find some cultivars that show moderate levels of resistance against MoT, such as the Brazilian cultivars IPR 85, CD 113 and BR-18 Terena. Other cultivars can be found around the world, such as the Bolivian cultivar named Paragua CIAT and Parapeti CIAT, which showed a high level of resistance when compared to the others. However, cultivar Milan, from CIMMYT (International Center for Maize and Wheat Breeding) showed the highest level of resistance among all resistant cultivars described (Kohli et al., 2011Kohli MM, Mehta YR, Guzman E, De Viedma L and Cubilla LE (2011) Pyricularia blast-a threat to wheat cultivation. Czech J Genet Plant Breed 47:4.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). In Brazil, this year, the cultivar TBIO Triunfo (Biotrigo Genetica) was released, moderately resistant to blast, an example of the result of conventional genetic improvement work for the trait in the country. In Japan, breeding programs have been introducing blast resistance genes into their elite wheat varieties (Wang M et al., 2018Wang S, Asuke S, Vy TTP, Inoue Y, Chuma I, Win J, Kato K and Tosa Y (2018) A new resistance gene in combination with Rmg8 confers strong resistance against Triticum isolates of Pyricularia oryzae in a common wheat landrace. Phytopathology 108:1299-1306.).

Conventional breeding, even with its indispensable techniques and a history of great achievements in plant science, faces several challenges regarding wheat blast. In the conventional model, the process is challenged by the time required (5-10 years), the availability of genetic resources resistant to MoT, and the difficulty in selecting for resistance of a quantitative nature (Savadi et al., 2018Savadi S, Prasad P, Kashyap PL and Bhardwaj SC (2018) Molecular breeding technologies and strategies for rust resistance in wheat (Triticum aestivum) for sustained food security. Plant Pathol 67:771-791.; Islam et al., 2020Islam MT, Gupta DR, Hossain A, Roy KK, He X, Kabir MR, Singh PK, Khan M, Rahman A, Rahman M et al. (2020) Wheat blast: A new threat to food security. Phytopathology 2:28.). Even so, with the help of biotechnology tools, such as molecular markers, this process can have better results, especially in backcrosses with gene pyramiding. Also, accelerated breeding schemes, such as speed breeding, can generate faster results (Watson et al., 2018Watson A, Ghosh S, Williams MJ, Cuddy WS, Simmonds J, Rey MD, Asyraf Md Hatta M, Hinchliffe A, Steed A et al. (2018) Speed breeding is a powerful tool to accelerate crop research and breeding. Nature plants 4:23-29.).

In view of the limited sources of resistance available to MoT and the restricted genetic variability of wheat, inducing artificial mutations to create genetic variability is an alternative (Zhu et al., 2017Zhu C, Bortesi L, Baysal C, Twyman RM, Fischer R, Capell T, Schillberg S and Christou P (2017) Characteristics of genome editing mutations in cereal crops. Trends Plant Sci 22:38-52.). For this purpose, several mutation induction approaches can be used, with methods involving physical (X-ray, gamma radiation, ultraviolet radiation) and chemical (colchicine, EMS - ethylmethanesulfonate, MMS - methylmethanesulfonate (Hussain, 2015Hussain B (2015) Modernization in plant breeding approaches for improving biotic stress resistance in crop plants. Turk J Agric For 39:515-530.) mutagens. This is a difficult process, as the methods cause random mutations and provide a limiting mutation frequency at the desired/target loci, leading to uncertain results (Zhu et al., 2017Zhu C, Bortesi L, Baysal C, Twyman RM, Fischer R, Capell T, Schillberg S and Christou P (2017) Characteristics of genome editing mutations in cereal crops. Trends Plant Sci 22:38-52.; Ijaz et al., 2020Ijaz S and Ul Haq I (2020) Genome editing technologies for resistance against phytopathogens: Principles, applications and future prospects. In: Ul Haq I and Ijaz S (eds) Plant disease management strategies for sustainable agriculture through traditional and modern approaches, Sustainability in Plant and Crop Protection, Springer, pp 237-245.) be considered.

The induction of mutations aimed at resistance to blast in wheat has been hardly explored, but some studies have been reported in the literature. Induced mutations in wheat lines using gamma rays to obtain MoT resistant genotypes was performed (Harun-Or-Rashid et al., 2019Harun-Or-Rashid M, Meah MB, Uddin MI, Ahmed S and Kashem MA (2019) Gamma radiated wheat for combating devastating blast disease (Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum) in Bangladesh. J Agric Sci 1:2019.). Among the evaluated varieties, BARI Gom-30 showed the best performance in M2. However, the mutant lines need to be advanced a few generations, artificially inoculated with the MoT pathogen, and evaluated for resistance to confirm the results. The authors emphasize that this approach can be a potential substitute for the available chemical control methods, being described as an ecological and sustainable strategy. A study entitled Disease Resistance in Rice and Wheat for Better Adaptation to Climate Change, funded by the FAO, is currently being conducted. This research has the efforts of researchers from 10 countries, and one of the goals is the identification of MoT-resistant wheat mutants (IAEA, 2018IAEA (2018) IAEA: International Atomic Energy Agency, Disease Resistance in Rice and Wheat for Better Adaptation to Climate Change, IAEA (2018) IAEA: International Atomic Energy Agency, Disease Resistance in Rice and Wheat for Better Adaptation to Climate Change, https://www.iaea.org/projects/crp/d23032 (accessed 22 December 2021).
https://www.iaea.org/projects/crp/d23032...
). Our group initiated induced mutation for blast resistance in wheat in 2018, and the parental variety was TBIO Toruk. Several thousand plants have been conducted after 2 gamma-ray (250 and 300Gy) and one chemical (2% EMS) treatments. Some mutant individuals seemed resistant after inoculation with MoT race Pyricularia oryzae 4-06 (Figure 3).

Figure 3 -
A. M4 mutant plant showing resistant phenotype; B. M4 individual showing susceptible phenotype. Credits to Amanda Valentini Baseggio.

In a recent study, alleles that may confer resistance to MoT in a mutant population of wheat in M2 were detected, providing valuable information for genetic improvement (Guo et al., 2021Guo H, Du Q, Xie Y, Xiong H, Zhao L, Gu J, Zhao S, Song X, Islam T and Liu L (2021) Identification of rice blast loss-of-function mutant alleles in the wheat genome as a new strategy for wheat blast resistance breeding. Front Genet 12:705.). The population, exposed to the EMS mutagen, was analysed by TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions IN Genomes). The study revealed 81 SNPs located in exonic and promoter regions, as well as 13 alleles related to resistance to MoT.

Molecular breeding

The integration of biotechnology strategies in the improvement of agricultural crops has contributed to the development of disease resistance, accelerating the development of new varieties. Among the biotechnology tools that have direct application and great impact on plant breeding, molecular markers and transgenics, and more recently the genome editing technique using CRISPR technology, can be highlighted.

Transgenics

In plant breeding, transgenesis has been considered a powerful tool, capable of introducing a wide range of desirable traits into agricultural crops, such as higher yield and nutrition, and tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses (Periyannan et al., 2013Periyannan S, Moore J, Ayliffe M, Bansal U, Wang X, Huang L, Deal K, Luo M, Kong X, Bariana H et al. (2013) The gene Sr33, an ortholog of barley Mla genes, encodes resistance to wheat stem rust race Ug99. Science 341:786-788.; Chang et al., 2016Chang W, Liu X, Zhu J, Fan W and Zhang Z (2016) An aquaporin gene from halophyte Sesuvium portulacastrum, SpAQP1, increases salt tolerance in transgenic tobacco. Plant Cell Rep 35:385-395.; Savadi et al., 2017Savadi S, Lambani N, Kashyap PL and Bisht DS (2017) Genetic engineering approaches to enhance oil content in oilseed crops. Plant Growth Regul 83: 207-222.; 2018Savadi S, Prasad P, Kashyap PL and Bhardwaj SC (2018) Molecular breeding technologies and strategies for rust resistance in wheat (Triticum aestivum) for sustained food security. Plant Pathol 67:771-791.).

Using transgenics, breeders can precisely manipulate the gene that encodes a trait of interest, inserting genes from unrelated species or silencing specific genes (Miah et al., 2013Miah G, Rafii MY, Ismail MR, Puteh AB, Rahim HA, Islam K and Latif MA (2013) A review of microsatellite markers and their applications in rice breeding programs to improve blast disease resistance. Int J Mol Sci 14:22499-22528.). Research using transgenics has shown promissing results for genetic resistance to diseases caused by several pathogens, such as Blumeria graminis, Bipolaris sorokiniana, Fusarium graminearum, Rhizoctonia solani and Pyricularia oryzae (Shimono et al., 2007Shimono M, Sugano S, Nakayama A, Jiang CJ, Ono K, Toki S and Takatsuji H (2007) Rice WRKY45 plays a crucial role in benzothiadiazole-inducible blast resistance. Plant Cell 19:2064-2076.; Helliwell et al., 2013Helliwell EE, Wang Q and Yang Y (2013) Transgenic rice with inducible ethylene production exhibits broad‐spectrum disease resistance to the fungal pathogens Magnaporthe oryzae and Rhizoctonia solani. Plant Biotechnol J 11:33-42.; Li et al., 2015Li X, Shin S, Heinen S, Dill-Macky R, Berthiller F, Nersesian N, Clemente T, McCormick S and Muehlbauer GJ (2015) Transgenic wheat expressing a barley UDP-glucosyltransferase detoxifies deoxynivalenol and provides high levels of resistance to Fusarium graminearum. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 28:1237-1246.; Del Ponte et al., 2017Del Ponte EM, Valent B and Bergstrom GC (2017) A special issue on Fusarium head blight and wheat blast. Trop Plant Pathol 42:143-145.). For blast, several transgenic studies were performed aiming to develop plants resistant to the disease, most of them carried out in rice (Shimono et al., 2007; Chen et al. 2010Chen DX, Chen XW, Lei CL, Wang YP and Li SG (2010) Rice blast resistance transgenic rice plants with Pi-d2 gene. Rice Sci 17:179-184.; Helliwell et al., 2013; Bundó and Coca, 2016Bundó M and Coca M (2016) Enhancing blast disease resistance by overexpression of the calcium‐dependent protein kinase OsCPK4 in rice. Plant Biotechnol J 14:1357-1367.; Wang and Valent, 2017Wang S, Chen H, Tang X, Zhang H, Chen W and Chen YQ (2017) Molecular tools for gene manipulation in filamentous fungi. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 101:8063-8075.; Chandran et al., 2019Chandran V, Wang H, Gao F, Cao XL, Chen YP, Li GB, Zhu Y, Yang XM, Zhang LL, Zhao ZX et al. (2019) miR396-OsGRFs module balances growth and rice blast disease-resistance. Front Plant Sci 9:1999.).

In rice, overexpression of the transcription factor WRKY45 was explored in relation to blast resistance by Shimono et al. (2007Shimono M, Sugano S, Nakayama A, Jiang CJ, Ono K, Toki S and Takatsuji H (2007) Rice WRKY45 plays a crucial role in benzothiadiazole-inducible blast resistance. Plant Cell 19:2064-2076.). In another study with transgenic rice, ACS 2 overexpressing lines were more resistant to blast due to high ethylene production and expression of PR1b and PR5 genes (Helliwell et al., 2013Helliwell EE, Wang Q and Yang Y (2013) Transgenic rice with inducible ethylene production exhibits broad‐spectrum disease resistance to the fungal pathogens Magnaporthe oryzae and Rhizoctonia solani. Plant Biotechnol J 11:33-42.). In millet, genetic transformation of a rice chitinase gene (chi11) showed resistance to leaf blast (Ignacimuthu and Ceasar, 2012Ignacimuthu S and Ceasar SA (2012) Development of transgenic finger millet (Eleusine coracana (L.) Gaertn.) resistant to leaf blast disease. J Biosci 37:135-147.). Even with so many promising examples, there are still no applications of this technology to develop MoT-resistant transgenic wheat lines.

There are still many controversies involving transgenic organisms, especially in crops, such as wheat, where the acceptance of the technology is still a matter of debate. An important point to consider in the development of transgenic plants is the production time and adaptation to the legislation that the product demands, from its discovery until it becomes a commercial product, which would take approximately 10 years of research. Even so, there are countless possibilities involving this technology, such as the development of transgenic plants overexpressing genes involved in the resistance response to high-impact diseases, such as wheat blast.

In Brazil, only six species with transgenic events are released for cultivation, namely: maize, soybean, cotton, bean, sugarcane and eucalyptus. In the world, until recently, only wheat with a transgenic event for tolerance to the herbicide Glyphosate had been released for cultivation in Australia, United States, New Zealand and Colombia (ISAAA, 2022ISAAA (2022) ISAAA.org: International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications, org: International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications, https://www.isaaa.org/gmapprovaldatabase/crop/default.asp?CropID=25& Crop=Wheat (20 November 2021).
https://www.isaaa.org/gmapprovaldatabase...
). However, in October 2020, Argentina’s Ministry of Agriculture approved the GM HB4 drought-tolerant wheat for cultivation and consumption, making it the first country to adopt HB4 technology (Sheridan, 2021Sheridan C (2021) Argentina first to market with drought-resistant GM wheat. Nat Biotechnol 39:652.). This release had an impact on Brazil, Argentina’s main wheat importer, where, in recent days, the marketing of wheat flour produced from the genetically modified cereal was approved by the National Technical Biosafety Commission (CTNBio), the entity responsible for regulating GMOs in the country. Despite the controversy surrounding the decision, the release of transgenic wheat for cultivation and consumption is a great advance and reinforces its applicability of the technology for other diverse purposes in wheat cultivation.

Gene editing

Technologies aimed at changing the DNA are not new. Since the double helix structure discovery in 1953, technological advances have advanced rapidly (Watson and Crick, 1953Watson JD and Crick FH (1953) Molecular structure of nucleic acids: A structure for deoxyribose nucleic acid. Nature 171:737-738.). At first, DNA changes were performed by random mutagenesis using chemical or physical methods (Zhu et al., 2016Zhu Z, Wu X, Lv B, Wu G, Wang J, Jiang W, Li P, He J, Chen J, Chen M et al. (2016) A new approach for breeding low‐temperature‐resistant Volvariella volvacea strains: Genome shuffling in edible fungi. Biotechnol Appl Biochem 63:605-615.; Kun et al., 2019Kun RS, Gomes ACS, Hildén KS, Cerezo SS, Mäkelä MR and de Vries RP (2019) Developments and opportunities in fungal strain engineering for the production of novel enzymes and enzyme cocktails for plant biomass degradation. Biotechnol Adv 37:107361.), which, despite being random, are still frequently used today. In a second moment, technologies were developed that enabled the silencing or random insertion of genes into the genome (transgenesis), as mentioned above (Wang et al., 2017Wang GL and Valent B (2017) Durable resistance to rice blast. Science 355:906-907.). Finally, it is possible to find highly accurate gene editing technologies (Jinek et al., 2012Jinek M, Chylinski K, Fonfara I, Hauer M, Doudna JA and Charpentier E (2012) A programmable dual-RNA-guided DNA endonuclease in adaptive bacterial immunity. Science 337:816-821.; Lino et al., 2018Lino CA, Harper JC, Carney JP and Timlin JA (2018) Delivering CRISPR: A review of the challenges and approaches. Drug Deliv 25:1234-1257.).

Editing strategies use sequence-specific nucleases (SSNs), which promote the generation of double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) at specific locations within the genome in a mediated manner. DSB repair can be performed by two cellular repair mechanisms: homologous recombination - HR and non-homologous end joining - NHEJ (Zhu et al., 2017Zhu C, Bortesi L, Baysal C, Twyman RM, Fischer R, Capell T, Schillberg S and Christou P (2017) Characteristics of genome editing mutations in cereal crops. Trends Plant Sci 22:38-52.; Viana et al., 2019Viana VE, Pegoraro C, Busanello C and Costa de Oliveira A (2019) Mutagenesis in rice: The basis for breeding a new super plant. Front Plant Sci 10:1326.). Different editing tools have been used, such as Mega nucleases (MNs), Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) and Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat/CRISPR-associated protein (CRISPR / Cas9) (Zhu et al., 2017Zhu C, Bortesi L, Baysal C, Twyman RM, Fischer R, Capell T, Schillberg S and Christou P (2017) Characteristics of genome editing mutations in cereal crops. Trends Plant Sci 22:38-52.; Viana et al., 2019Viana VE, Pegoraro C, Busanello C and Costa de Oliveira A (2019) Mutagenesis in rice: The basis for breeding a new super plant. Front Plant Sci 10:1326.). MNs have been successfully used in some species, such as Arabidopsis, cotton and maize, and there are no reports of their application in wheat for resistance to MoT (Daboussi et al., 2015Daboussi F, Stoddard TJ and Zhang F (2015) Engineering meganuclease for precise plant genome modification. In: Zhang F, Puchta H and Thomson J (eds) Advances in new technology for targeted modification of plant genomes, Springer, New York, pp 21-38.; Zhu et al., 2017Zhu C, Bortesi L, Baysal C, Twyman RM, Fischer R, Capell T, Schillberg S and Christou P (2017) Characteristics of genome editing mutations in cereal crops. Trends Plant Sci 22:38-52.; Viana et al., 2019Viana VE, Pegoraro C, Busanello C and Costa de Oliveira A (2019) Mutagenesis in rice: The basis for breeding a new super plant. Front Plant Sci 10:1326.). In genetic improvement, ZFNs have been successfully used in species such as rice, maize and Arabidopsis (Cantos et al., 2014Cantos C, Francisco P, Trijatmiko KR, Slamet-Loedin I and Chadha-Mohanty PK (2014) Identification of “safe harbor” loci in indica rice genome by harnessing the property of zinc-finger nucleases to induce DNA damage and repair. Front Plant Sci 5:302.; Yin and Qiu, 2019Yin K and Qiu JL (2019) Genome editing for plant disease resistance: Applications and perspectives. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 374:20180322.; Ijaz et al., 2020Ijaz S and Ul Haq I (2020) Genome editing technologies for resistance against phytopathogens: Principles, applications and future prospects. In: Ul Haq I and Ijaz S (eds) Plant disease management strategies for sustainable agriculture through traditional and modern approaches, Sustainability in Plant and Crop Protection, Springer, pp 237-245.). However, there is no reports of application for MoT.

In plant breeding, gene editing tools allow accelerating the development of new cultivars with durable resistance to pathogens by modifying loci involved in the plant’s defense system (Andolfo et al., 2016Andolfo G, Iovieno P, Frusciante L and Ercolano MR (2016) Genome-editing technologies for enhancing plant disease resistance. Front Plant Sci 7:1813.; Yin and Qiu, 2019Yin K and Qiu JL (2019) Genome editing for plant disease resistance: Applications and perspectives. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 374:20180322.). The applicability of these tools in wheat can be exemplified by the study in which TALEN and CRISPR/Cas9 were used to introduce simultaneous mutations in the three homologous hexaploid wheat alleles that encode proteins responsible for repressing the plant’s defenses against powdery mildew. The modification conferred broad-spectrum heritable resistance to Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici (Wang et al., 2014Wang Y, Cheng X, Shan Q, Zhang Y, Liu J, Gao C and Qiu JL (2014) Simultaneous editing of three homoeoalleles in hexaploid bread wheat confers heritable resistance to powdery mildew. Nat Biotechnol 32:947-951.). In another study, CRISPR / Cas9 was applied to the specific mutation in the OsERF922 in rice, resulting in increased resistance to blast (Wang et al., 2016Wang F, Wang C, Liu P, Lei C, Hao W, Gao Y, Liu YG and Zhao K (2016) Enhanced rice blast resistance by CRISPR/Cas9-targeted mutagenesis of the ERF transcription factor gene OsERF922. PLoS One 11:e0154027.). Despite the lack of published results on CRISPR in wheat cultivation for the development of wheat blast-resistant cultivars, it is possible to check the protocol for the application of this technology for wheat cultivation developed by Bhowmik and Islam (2020Bhowmik PK and Islam MT (2020) CRISPR-Cas9-Mediated gene editing in wheat: A step-by-step protocol. In: Islam MT, Bhowmik PK and Molla KA (eds) CRISPR-Cas methods, Humana Press, New York, pp 203-222.).

Gene editing tools have an important advantage over other approaches with the same purpose, as mutagenesis triggered in the host does not involve foreign DNA, which does not configure the event obtained as a transgenic. This difference can help alleviate biosafety and bioethics regulations related to genetically modified organisms, and the product tends to be better accepted by the market (Yesmin et al., 2020Yesmin N, Jenny F, Abdullah HM, Hossain MM, Kader MA, Solomon PS and Bhuiyan MA (2020) A review on South Asian wheat blast: The present status and future perspective. Plant Pathol 69:1618-1629.). Compared to mutation induction using physical and chemical agents, the advantage is that the editing tools are directed, not random. Considering all the advantages of gene editing, it is shown as a viable and sustainable alternative to develop blast resistant wheat cultivars (Yesmin et al., 2020Yesmin N, Jenny F, Abdullah HM, Hossain MM, Kader MA, Solomon PS and Bhuiyan MA (2020) A review on South Asian wheat blast: The present status and future perspective. Plant Pathol 69:1618-1629.).

Concluding remarks

Wheat is an important food grain, providing essential nutrients for humanity. The improvement has been responsible for the increase in crop yields, as well as for improving many other traits, such as grain quality, resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses. However, the aggravation of climate change requires that the improvement process be accelerated in order to keep up with the rapid advance of pathogens.

Wheat blast, a disease caused by the pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Triticum, is considered a major threat to global cereal production due to its potential to damage the crops. Only conventional breeding efforts are not sufficient for the rapid development of new varieties with long and broad-spectrum resistance against the rapidly evolving pathogen (Figure 3).

To control this important disease, genetic resistance is considered the most efficient and sustainable way, being essential to obtain new sources of resistance. Therefore, the identification of other sources of resistance to MoT is of great importance. In this sense, transcription factors (TFs), which regulate the expression of genes involved in different plant functions, are strategies to identify candidate genes involved in the response to blast in wheat (Baillo et al., 2019Baillo EH, Kimotho RN, Zhang Z and Xu P (2019) Transcription factors associated with abiotic and biotic stress tolerance and their potential for crops improvement. Genes 10:771.). It is important to consider further in-depth studies to understand the transcriptional profile of target genes from TF families. Transcription factors and other candidate genes involved in blast resistance can be identified using tools such as microarrays, RNASeq and Quantitative Real-time PCR.

Thus, besides the conventional breeding, the use of mutation breeding and technologies such as QTL mapping, gene expression analysis, transgenics and genome editing can be important approaches to assist the plant genetic improvement process (Figure 4), enabling a variety of combinations in order to slow down the co-evolution of the pathogen and improve the durability of wheat blast resistance.

Figure 4 -
Schematic representation of plant breeding tools available to obtain wheat cultivars resistant to Magnaporthe oryzae pathotype Triticum.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Brazilian Ministry of Science and Technology, National Counsel of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq); Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) and the Rio Grande do Sul State Foundation for Research Support (FAPERGS); INCT Plant Stress (MCTI) and FAO/IAEA Joint Division.

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Internet Resources

Edited by

Associate Editor:

Marcio de Castro Silva Filho

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    03 Apr 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    19 Jan 2022
  • Accepted
    09 Dec 2022
Sociedade Brasileira de Genética Rua Cap. Adelmio Norberto da Silva, 736, 14025-670 Ribeirão Preto SP Brazil, Tel.: (55 16) 3911-4130 / Fax.: (55 16) 3621-3552 - Ribeirão Preto - SP - Brazil
E-mail: editor@gmb.org.br